Intravenous Versus Oral Acetaminophen For Pain & Quality Of Recovery After Ambulatory Spine Surgery
                                                    Intravenous Versus Oral Acetaminophen For Pain & Quality Of Recovery After Ambulatory Spine Surgery
Intravenous versus oral acetaminophen for pain and quality of recovery after ambulatory spine surgery: a randomized controlled trial.
Reg Anesth Pain Med . 2025 Jun 10;50(6):483-488.Synopsis
Eighty-two patients undergoing ambulatory lumbar spine surgery were randomized to receive either 1000 mg intravenous acetaminophen (n=42) or 1000 mg oral acetaminophen (n=40). The primary outcome of interest was 24-hour opioid consumption in intravenous morphine milligram equivalents (MMEs). Secondary outcomes included postoperative pain ratings, PACU opioid use, Quality of Recovery (QoR-15) score...
                To view the full content, login to your account,
or start your 30-day FREE Trial today.
            
            FREE TRIAL
            LOGIN
            Forgot Password?
    Explore some of our unlocked ACE Reports below!
                Learn about our AI Driven 
 High Impact Search Feature
    Our AI driven High Impact metric calculates the impact an article will have by considering both the publishing journal and the content of the article itself. Built using the latest advances in natural language processing, OE High Impact predicts an article’s future number of citations better than impact factor alone.
Continue
                    
                
                                                        
                                                        
                                    LOGIN
                                
            
Join the Conversation
Please Login or Join to leave comments.